Matthias Joseph de Noël explained

Matthias Joseph de Noël (28 December 1782 – 18 November 1849) was a German merchant, painter, art collector and writer.

Life

Born in Cologne, de Noël learned drawing after a commercial apprenticeship in his home town with Egidius Mengelberg and Caspar Arnold Grein, as well as oil painting with Benedikt Beckenkamp.[1] After this training, he spent longer periods in Rome and Paris to devote himself entirely to painting.After his father's death, de Noël returned to Cologne to continue his parents' business.In 1828, de Noël became curator of Cologne's first municipal museum, the Wallrafianum, later Cologne's Wallraf-Richartz-Museum. There he took over from the curator Johann Jakob Peter Fuchs the care of the legacy of his friend Ferdinand Franz Wallraf bequeathed to the city of Cologne.[2] His own extensive art collection later became the foundation of the Cologne Kunstgewerbemuseums.[3] [4]

As a writer, he contributed to the renewal of the Cologne Carnival. In addition, he is one of three authors responsible for the art-historical part of the first Cologne city guide from 1828.

de Noël died in Cologne at the age of 66 and was buried in Cologne at the Melaten cemetery (lit. D).[5]

Work

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Cologne City Guide
  2. Cologne City Guide,
  3. Carl Dietmar, Chronik Kölns,
  4. http://www.artnet.com/artists/matthias-joseph-de-noel/ Matthias Joseph de Noel
  5. Josef Abt, Johann Ralf Beines, Celia Körber-Leupold: Melaten – Kölner Gräber und Geschichte. Greven, Cologne 1997,,